Portal:Japan/Anniversaries/January

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These are the selected anniversaries for January that appear on the Japan portal. The "edit" links edit the portal subpages that are displayed as sections here.

January 1

January 1:

Events

  • 1873 - Japan begins using the Gregorian calendar
  • 1930 - The Ministry of Rail adopts the metric system for all of Japan's railways
  • 1946 - Emperor Shōwa renounces his divinity, known in Japanese as the Human Declaration
  • 1948 - The Nijūbashi Bridge, a well known double arched stone bridge located between the front and middle gates of the Imperial Palace, is opened to the public
  • 1950 - The old practice of advancing one's age every New Year's Day (regardless of one's date of birth) is replaced by the western style of advancing one's age on each anniversary of one's date of birth. Under the old system, someone born on November 1, for example, would turn one on January 1, two months later.
  • 1963 - The well known animated television show Astro Boy begins a four-year 200-episode run
  • 1973 - Health care for those over 70 years of age is made free of charge
  • 1991 - Telephone numbers in Tokyo are expanded from 7 digits to 8 digits

Births

Holidays and observances

Edit January 1 anniversariesJanuary 1 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 1 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 2

January 2:

Events

  • 1905 - Russia surrenders Port Arthur, or Lüshunkou, to the Japanese, during the Russo-Japanese War.
  • 1942 - World War II: Manila is captured by Japanese forces.
  • 1948 - The Imperial Palace is reopened to the public for New Year's celebrations for the first time in 25 years, drawing 130,000 visitors.
  • 1954 - Sixteen people are crushed to death during New Year's celebrations at the Imperial Palace's Nijūbashi Bridge.
  • 1966 - Japan's first monster show, Ultra Q, begins broadcasting.
  • 1969 - During New Year's celebrations, a man is arrested for hurling a pachinko ball at Emperor Shōwa in resentment for having lost a friend during the war. The next year, the emperor begins making his New Year's appearances from behind protective glass.

Births

Holidays, observances, and anniversaries

Edit January 2 anniversariesJanuary 2 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 2 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 3

January 3:

Events

Births

Deaths

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January 4

January 4:

Events

  • 1873 - With the adoption of the Western calendar, the five seasonal festivals (gosekku)Jinjitsu on January 7th, Jōshi on March 3rd, Tango on May 5th, Tanabata on July 7th and Chōyō on September 9th)—are abolished.
  • 1877 - Land tax reform is implemented.
  • 1882 - Emperor Meiji issues the Imperial Script for the Military (Gunjin Chokuyu).
  • 1937 - Two plates containing 58 scales are stolen off of the kinshachi (a kind of dolphin fish) affixed to the top of the castle tower of Nagoya Castle. The culprit was apprehended 23 days later.
  • 1946 - The Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers, General Douglas MacArthur order the Japanese government to expel all militarists from positions of power. The disbandment of all ultra-nationalist organizations is also ordered.
  • 1948 - International telephone service between the United States and Japan is established.
  • 1953 - NHK Radio broadcasts its first live marathon coverage.
  • 1977 - Poisoned cola is placed in a telephone booth near Shinagawa Station, killing two.

Births

Deaths

Edit January 4 anniversariesJanuary 4 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 4 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 5

January 5:

Events

  • 1874 - A road for horse carriages joining Tokyo's Kyōbashi district and Shinbashi district is completed.
  • 1905 - Japan's General Nogi Maresuke and Russia's General Anatoly Stoessel meet at Shǔishīgōng (Suishiei).
  • 1919 - Matsuisu Mako, a Shingeki (western style drama) actress, commits suicide. It is believed that she committed suicide to be with Shimamura Hōgetsu, who died two months earlier. Shimamura was a literary figure who co-founded the Geijutsuza Club with Matsuisu for the purpose of introducing modern western style drama to Japan.
  • 1955 - Cinerama opens in Tokyo and Osaka.
  • 1974 - Japan and China sign a trade agreement.

Births

Deaths

Film and television

Edit January 5 anniversariesJanuary 5 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 5 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 6

January 6:

Births

Deaths

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January 7

January 7:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

Holidays, observances, and anniversaries

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January 8

January 8:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 9

January 9:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 10

January 10:

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 11

January 11:

Events

Births

Deaths

  • 1979 - Jack Soo (b. 1917), Japanese-American actor and singer

Film and television

Edit January 11 anniversariesJanuary 11 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 11 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 12

January 12:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 13

January 13:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 14

January 14:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 15

January 15:

Births

Film and television

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January 16

January 16:

Births

Deaths

Film and television

Edit January 16 anniversariesJanuary 16 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 16 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 17

January 17:

Events

Births

Edit January 17 anniversariesJanuary 17 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 17 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 18

January 18:

Births

Film and television

Edit January 18 anniversariesJanuary 18 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 18 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 19

January 19:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

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January 20

January 20:

Births

Film and television

Edit January 20 anniversariesJanuary 20 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 20 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 21

January 21:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

Edit January 21 anniversariesJanuary 21 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 21 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 22

January 22:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 22 anniversariesJanuary 22 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 22 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 23

January 23:

Events

Births

Edit January 23 anniversariesJanuary 23 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 23 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 24

January 24:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 24 anniversariesJanuary 24 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 24 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 25

January 25:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 25 anniversariesJanuary 25 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 25 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 26

January 26:

Events

Births

Deaths

Film and television

Edit January 26 anniversariesJanuary 26 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 26 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 27

January 27:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 27 anniversariesJanuary 27 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 27 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 28

January 28:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 28 anniversariesJanuary 28 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 28 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 29

January 29:

Events

  • 1879 - Japan enters into an international telecommunications treaty.
  • 1934 - The Japan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. is formed from the merger of Hachiman Steel and several other privately owned companies.
  • 1940 - Three trains on the Sakurajima Line, in Osaka collide and explode while approaching Ajikawaguchi station. 181 people are killed.
  • 1944 - Editors of Reform magazine and Central Review magazine are arrested in a wartime crackdown against liberal intellectuals known as the Yokohama Incident.
  • 1957 - The Shōwa Base is established at the South Pole.
  • 1961 - Mokkan (inscribed wooden slabs) are excavated at the site of the former capital Heijōkyō in Nara.
  • 1968 - A strike at the faculty of medicine marks the beginning of a period of demonstrations and unrest at Tokyo University.

Births

Deaths

Edit January 29 anniversariesJanuary 29 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 29 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 30

January 30:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 30 anniversariesJanuary 30 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 30 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia

January 31

January 31:

Events

Births

Deaths

Edit January 31 anniversariesJanuary 31 anniversaries on English WikipediaJanuary 31 anniversaries on Japanese Wikipedia